The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 April 1965 — Page 3

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s H^4Yfll)RHEMTH

Bjr LESTEB L. COLEMAN, M.D.

Doctor, I’d Like To Know—

.

EVERYONE in our community discussion jjroup is very interested 'in health. I have been assigned to give a ten minute talk on the causes of disease. -Ato*k I «irire- me sujnrrstions lor peppering this talk?

Mr. L. B., J^daho {

6aar *Mr. B:. Your gi-oup's

i n t e i^s t i n health is shared

i by everybody. Good health

is the cornerstone of the total economy of a nation. The health of even’ — individual has Dr. Coleman far-reaching ef'Q' '* f'ects on his family, his job, his community mmA aoaiaty -a* a whale. r “Thr~causes of disease can be broatly- classified as infection, aller^E', ‘ liefedity, injury, malButrit^v odd age. Overexposure to heit; cold, electricity and other physical elements, burns, offecto .^oni chemical agents. drttgSl 4 'inflammations, tumors and the emotions. < nie*e -general classifications have.'lof’eourse, many subhead-

ing- 3r.

a Discussions on health should | bo directed by well-informed 4 pe^la. Physicians, nurses, J dieticians and others with spe^Miced- training in the general _Yield vt medicine can clarify

of the myths, supersti-

misunderstandings

•bout health and disease. If such • discussion is not •upervised by someone with factual knowledge, it may tend to conftwrffad of enlighten nnd eefc^Wren increase the nmdety^K peeple who are beset

by miagtaded fears.

o o o

Wo bore been told that our Obild’s tonsils are infected and should bo removed. I have almgtm iMgB that infected ton-

4 many

•tionsi add

sils cause a bad odor, but he dees not have bad breath. What do tonsils look like when they are infected? Mrs. G. D„ West Virgirria Dear Mrs. D.: The presence or absence of bad breath in a child is not an important-factor in the physician’s diagnosis of infected tonsils. The appearance of the tonsils can only be evaluated, hy, the trained eye of a doctor. -Ovpis and enlargement of the tonsils are important indications, together with other signs of chronic infection. As a rule, the common symptoms which indicate a need for removal of the tonsils and'the adenoids are: . . - 1> Frequent and severe -attacks of tonsillitis, and repeated colds of long duration. 2) Persistent tenderness and enlargement of the glands in the neck. 3) Frequent ear infections, often accompanied by impairment of hearing. 4) Marked nasality of speech, mouth breathing and snoring^ which are major symptoms of enlarged adenoids. Removal of the tonsils and adenoids is not routinely_ performed on all children. Tha physician bases his decision on mature judgment, training and experience. This operation is recommemi^ ed only when a careful revievf of the child’s medical history and the physical findings in tha ears, nose and threat give evidence that the tonsils and adenoids are a chronic source of infection. While Dr. Colemaf .cannot undertake to answer inthfidual letters, he will use readers? questions in his column whenever possible and when they are of general interest. Address your letters to Dr. Coleman in care of this newspaper.

Backstairs At The White House JOHNSON CITY, Tex. UPI— Backstairs at the Texas White House: President Johnson’s Sunday jaunts through the Texas countryside — at the head of 30 or 40-car caravans of aides, newsmen and tourists — are opening new natural vistas to city j slickers who follow his dusty trail. Visiting lawmakers, newsmen, Secret Service Agents and other motorcades, who never used to get closer to cattle than the neighborhood butcher shop, are watching the excited response of livestock when John-1 son drives through a pasture tooting a motorized bull horn. They are observing Texas bluebonnets and other wild flowers alongside the road one hardbitten newsreel camera qian actually picked a bouquet and are coming to know a live oak tree from a cedar. An easy aid to this learning is a handsomely designed, 80 page volume titled ‘‘A President's Country’ ’and subtitled “A Guide to the Hill Country of

Th« Daily Bannar, Greencastle, Indiana, Wednesday, April 21,1965 T ■•i ■ ’

^ ^(t^pj^tunecloe. GAINES DOG gCSgAfiOHStHCg '' si ft

THERE ARE LBFT-HANDED DOGS AS WELL AS LEFT-HANDED PEOPLE, ACCORDING TO SCIENTISTS. THE HUNTING DOC INVAPIAMV RAISES THE SAME FORELEG EACH TIME HE FREEZES ON POtUT

MTHE BASEMENT OFCASACUfPf, FLORENCE, ITALY, THE ISTH CENTURY MLAZZO Of WflOf POETS ROBERTAS? ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING SPENT MOST OF THEIR YEARS; LIES BURIED FLUSH,THE LATTER'* COCKER SPANIEL, Wm VIRGINIA WOOLF ADMIRED SO MUCH SHE WROTE HIS BIOGRAPHY

fjs;

!H SON AM ENGLAND. A MAN MADE PUBUC

APOLOGY 10 A POC. BERT PEACOCK HAD

COMPLAINED TO THE POLICE THAT A NEIGH-

BOR^ PET HAD BITTEN HIS SON, BUT RAN AN AD OF APOLOGY IN THE LOCAL PRESS WHEN HE DISCOVERED THAT .THE ACCUSATION WAS FALSE

i -i 1 ^ © 1965 Gaines Dog Research Center. N, Y. C.

Kiss Features Syndicate. Inc.)

fee Cm Pc It And Save

BREAK-TIME Nancy Slaughter takes a breather during a practice session of “The Torch Bearers.’’ Nancy will play the part of Mrs. J. Duro Pampinelli in the Thespian Troupe production. The play will be given tonight at 8:00 in the Junior High School auditorium. Photo by Martin Kruse

Texas.” The brief book was much when it first came out edited by Jack M’cGuire, execu- i a te last year that he gave i tive secretary of the Ex-Stu- : copies to scores of visitorg to dents Association of the University of Texas. hi * s ranch ’ and happi,y aut °- graphed a good many of those

FIlfHRF

LLvIIIIIj

Johnson liked the book so i editions.

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Mother, Seven Children Killed NEWARJC, N. J. UPI — A 39-year-old woman and seven of her children died Tuesday night when a_car in which they Were passengers went out of control and- collided head-on with a tractor trailer. Five other persons were in jured in the accident on U. S. Route 1 near the Newark Airport. I Tfth"*&eh'd wtre identified as Mrs. Ann f)bfa Sherod, and her children, Jessie Lee, 15, Anna Jean. 16. Joe Nathan, 8, Kathy, 3, Wanda, 4, Marina, 18, and James Arthur, 14. James died in a hospital several hours,after the accident. The others were dead at the scene oT died shortly after reaching a hospital. Police said the father of the children, Arthur Sherod, 37, of Jersey City, was driving the car when^i^swerved from the far rightt’ TaJN, crossed three • • ■ i ytf* divider strips and smashed diagonally into the tractor-trail-er which was moving in the opposite direction.

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Sherod and two other children, Diane, 5, and Charles, 9. were taken to city hospital in serious condition. Wilmer A. Martin, 33, Gastonia, 1\ T . C v ' driver of the trac-tor-trailer, and' his assistant, James C v Turner Jr., 35, Concord, N. C., Were admitted to Beth jlarael ^Hospital, both suffering from shock and injuries. Segregationist Found Innocent i ATLANTA UPI — Segregaj. tioniqt *Li68ter Maddox was foufid _ixmgcent Tuesday of ! pojntiag m pistol at a Negro whp \Vaiiffcti to eat at his res,j taiUKUiti ■ wks hpe of many court appearances : 'facing Maddox who closed his restaurant and leased I it to two former employes ra- ' §erve Negroes or face a fPierHUcourt fine of $200 a da^fpr defiance., l*jjg|ji!'fei^'fte would be go- ^ ing^5So,4i|w furniture business 1 someH$)£*J9 £iigust. j “I'm jtwt'fryi'ng to survive,” 'he said. The panel of nine men and ] three women deliberated only i 47 minutes before setting Maddox free on the charge brought by two Negroes. The Negroes had attempted to eat at Maddox’s Pickrick Restaurant last July 3, one day after the civil rights law was passed. “Thank God Lester, you’ve won again. Justice prevails,” sai^ ^ne woman as she pumped ' Maddox's Hand following the s £ j verdict.

Soviets Jam Allied Radar

BERLIN UPI — The Russians jammed Allied radar in the Berlin air corridors Tuesday in ajjevy. interference with } travel to and from the Red-en-circled city, it was announced

today.

An Allied spokesman said the Russians dropped “chaff” — i strips of tin foil cut to wave length of the Allied radars—in areas where it would confuse the radar picture. U.S., British and French officials protested the action, saying it endangered Allitd air

traffic.

The new interference with travel to and from isolated West Berlin came barely two weeks after the massive harassment -that acompanied the recent meeting of West Germany’s parliament in the former capital.

State's Traffic Dead Now 369 By United Press International Indiana's 1965 traffjp , tp}l climbed to at least 369 today, compared with 324 a year ago after two fatal accidents were i reported Tuesday, ending a more than 24-hour death-free driving period. Charles Nantz. 54. Marion, was killed late Tuesday night when he ran a stop at the junction of Indiana 18 and 3 in Blackford County, ramming the trailer of a truck driven by Ernest Dowden, 42. Fort Wayne., Richard Crafton, 23. rural Martinsville, was fataly injured Tuesday afternoon in a head-on collision north of Martinsville on Indiana 37. He died later in an Indianapolis hospital. Six other men were injured in the accident, none seriously.

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